Wednesday, November 14, 2012

David Cameron fooling the world on MI5 Asset Abu Qatada's release from prison

Following British authorities “reluctantly” releasing Abu Qatada from
prison on bail after a British court ruled the so-called "Muslim" cleric
should not be extradited to Jordan, British prime minister David Cameron complained,

“I am completely fed up with the fact that this man is
still at large in our country. We believe he is a threat to our country…
We have moved heaven and earth to try and comply with every single dot
and comma of every single convention to get him out of the country.”

Mr. Cameron would like the British people to believe he is disgusted
with the misdeeds of Mr. Qatada. Cameron, however, is leaving out the
part about Qatada’s service to British intelligence.

Abu Qatada, described as the so-called “spiritual head of the mujaheddin in
Europe,” worked with British intelligence and ratted out his fellow
Islamic extremists. In 1997, he met with MI5 and French officials say
his continued cooperation with the authorities allowed him to avoid
arrest after the terror attacks of September 11, 2001. The MI5 went so
far as to set him up in a safe house and protect him.

Qatada’s friend, Bisher al-Rawi, served as an informant and a
go-between MI5 and Qatada in numerous meetings between late 2001 and
2002. Al-Rawi also served as Qatada’s MI5 translator.

The cozy relationship ended in 2002 when Qatada was arrested, mostly
because he was an embarrassment – he had attempted to morally justify
the attacks in New York and Washington D.C.

For more on Qatada’s role as an informer and his relationship with
the late CIA asset Osama bin Laden, see the entry on him at the History Commons website.